Perceptual grouping via spatial selection in a focused-attention task
Perceptual grouping via spatial selection in a focused-attention task
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by location-invariant representation. Experiments demonstrating stronger interference or facilitation from distractors grouped by nonspatial features with the target than ungrouped distractors have been considered as evidence for the selection of location-invariant representations. However, few studies have measured spatial attention directly at the locations of the grouped or ungrouped objects. In these experiments subjects responded to spatial probes (dots) while also identifying a cued target letter among distractors. Probe responses were faster for distractor locations with the target color than for those with the nontarget color, implying that target-color locations receive more attention. This pattern of spatial attention may explain why target-color distractors interfere more with target identification than nontarget-color distractors. These results suggest that although attention can be directed by nonspatial properties such as grouping by color or organization of the scene into objects, selection may ultimately be based on location.
attention, grouping, location, cueing
611-624
Kim, Min-Shik
9106b81d-84d4-4068-a948-44c28fee7aae
Cave, Kyle R.
38f1020d-3cf6-4165-b462-4d9efd448790
March 2001
Kim, Min-Shik
9106b81d-84d4-4068-a948-44c28fee7aae
Cave, Kyle R.
38f1020d-3cf6-4165-b462-4d9efd448790
Kim, Min-Shik and Cave, Kyle R.
(2001)
Perceptual grouping via spatial selection in a focused-attention task.
Vision Research, 41 (5), .
(doi:10.1016/S0042-6989(00)00285-6).
Abstract
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by location-invariant representation. Experiments demonstrating stronger interference or facilitation from distractors grouped by nonspatial features with the target than ungrouped distractors have been considered as evidence for the selection of location-invariant representations. However, few studies have measured spatial attention directly at the locations of the grouped or ungrouped objects. In these experiments subjects responded to spatial probes (dots) while also identifying a cued target letter among distractors. Probe responses were faster for distractor locations with the target color than for those with the nontarget color, implying that target-color locations receive more attention. This pattern of spatial attention may explain why target-color distractors interfere more with target identification than nontarget-color distractors. These results suggest that although attention can be directed by nonspatial properties such as grouping by color or organization of the scene into objects, selection may ultimately be based on location.
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Published date: March 2001
Keywords:
attention, grouping, location, cueing
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Local EPrints ID: 56916
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/56916
ISSN: 0042-6989
PURE UUID: 9b044fdf-0305-427d-8c8e-b5e00c2e79a5
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Date deposited: 07 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:04
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Author:
Min-Shik Kim
Author:
Kyle R. Cave
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